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the carolina watchman r 01 xv.-thirb series salisbury n c october 9 188 no 52 coming in every day and when all are received will show to our friends the and fall and winter stock of goods in all desirable lines that ever was shown in our town stoke house will be full from top to bottom with goods at lower prices than ever before known for many articles please remember that we will pay you the high est prices for your cotton c and sell you gqo0 goods - as low as they can be bought in western north carolina j r d gaskill miscelfcaneouf peace susanna i o world great world with ail thy busy days ; and rushing tides that fill tjÂ»y great high ways i thy varied merchandise and costlj sliow | what is the greatest gift thou canst be stow t o life with all thy strivings and tjjj selu-mes . thy fond desires and ever changing dreams 1 what wilt thou give us for our eager quest ? what are thy choicest treasures t peace and rest ; bnt peace by striviug only njay be won â€” j the sure reward of duty bravely done and those who labor ami eudure the best after long toil shall know the sweetest rest danjsh barque it i alto on voyage from wilmington n c towards trieste austria off isle of zante ionian sea â€” sat urday feb 23 1884 a week to day since we quitted the plutonic shades of strom boli ; a week to-night since we bade defiance to the tenors of ocylla and charybdis and a week to-morrow since etna's peak with umbrage blue melted into sicilia's pastoral plains it was our fate to escape scyila and chary bd is only to fall into the clutches of boreas du ring the whole of this period we have been battling against a violent north er which sweeps down with irreaist able fury from the mountain regions of montenegro and dalmatia and is called bora by the shivering inhabi tants of the isles of greece this morning it was evident that the hours of the bora were numbered when i went on deck at 4 a m there was an expectant hush iu the atmosphere as if nature was awaiting with bated breath the impending change a mass of dusky clouds looming vast and fantastic in the uncertain light â€” like mountains in dreamland hung around the eastern horizon as though await ing the coming of the god of glad ness that they might catch the first golden beams a gleam of lambent bursts from the waves â€” higher and higher it ascends as the lord of light rises from his billowy couch at last his lower limb barely oscu lates the glowing horizon it is morn ou tho waters and purple and bright bursts on the billows the flushing of light there is one cloud that melts not with the others beneath the blazing food of light an examination with the binoculars proves it to be land the hyacinthiueisleof zmte <# iso la d'oro fiar di levante fair isle that from the fairest of all dowers the gentlest of all names doth take yes th<tt mass of misty purple can be no other than ai cient zaiithysus and that snow-crowned monarch di rectly ahead of us is mt enos on kephalonia what tiny isle is that hiding behind her larger sister's pur ple robe and peeping timidly over her snowy shoulders it is ithaca where sad penelope o'erlooked the wave and which the ever faithful son of laertes through all his long wander ings looked back upon and loved â€” non quia larga se>l quia sua to which and to his ever faithful wife his heart was ever constant through all the enchantments of the hesperi an garden of alciuous and the se ductive charms of the princess van cisca when calypso the fair-hair ed nymph with every beauty crown ed attempted by ravishing songs to prevail upon sad ulysses to re main with her in her violet isle amid scenes where if a god should cast his sight a god might gaze and wouder with de light he maintained a sad silence â€” while wistfully he eyed the barren dÂ«ep wept groaned despairing sighed and wept again until calypro becoming disgusted with his lugubrious ungallantry fitted him out with some cold victuals and a canoe and told him to paduie out what a noble guide book homer prove to these regions of song how the sublime descriptions of the son of jos the star of song the grace of graces puts to shame the drivel ling of bradshaw's and baedek er's he who can visit the scenes of the odyssey and iliad and believe homer to have been blind must then be prepared to impute to him the powers of divination in uo other manner can the accurate descriptions in that immortal work be accounted for the sightless author of paradise lost also wrote striking descriptions but chiefly of abstractions or of such things as the conversation of others might furnish him the ground work and his active imagination the re mainder milton's affliction came on in later life after his accute powers of observation hail stored his mind with countless visions and vivid memories pf the visible world of nature ho mer that lord of mighty song as | dante calif him combining the at i tention to minute details of crabbe 1 and hogg with the glowing imagery and rich vocabulary of byroit and i moore paints word pictures of such topographical exactness that the most ' unobserving co,yld scarcely fail to re cognize at a glance any scene describ ed in the wanderings of ulysses i even thought i could discern faith ftil argus in the group of sore-eyed scalded canines on the quay perhaps i wrong the brute in question but judging from the general expression of his features i would hesitate awhile before trusting to his powers of mem ory after a separation of twenty years i would prefer to place my depend ence on something higher â€” the back fence for instance about mid-day the unexpected re turn of the bora compelled us to turn our backs upon fair greece and thread our way among tke groups of islands which add beauty to the land scape bnt danger to the navigation how thickly associations cluster in this region the history and civili zation of a world is comprised within a territory no larger than rhode is land almost every spot of ground in this vicinity is immortalized by song or battle it was not a sense less fable which made clio the sister of calliope it was the thoughtful al legory of a philosophic stud observing mind which beheld the intimate rela tions of poetry to history in clothing with amaranthine fame the scenes of wars or verses what the punic wars did towards establishing the undying renown of ancient carthage the songs of homer have done for the ionian isles what the deeds of leonidas themistocles and miltiades were to the ancient greeks the verses of lord byron are to modern greece late in the afternoon when the sombre shadows of mt enos were ly ing far out upon the waves and the god of gladness was shedding his parting smile we sighted santa mau ra and about twilight ran in under lencadia's far protecting rock of woo where tradition says that sap pho committed suicide but where welcker that heartless teutonic icon oclast of romance pays she did not put suihi in your craw an old chicago sufferer asks about the new cure for dyspepsia some time ago the constitution pub lished the following special from athens : the most wonderful cures of dys pepsia are being made around athens by taking a spoonful of fine saud af ter each meal parties who have been suffering for years areentirely relieved there is a good deal of excitement over the new remedy this was extensively copied in the northern press and brought among other letters the following 1127 wabash avenue chicago il linois august 31st 1884 dear sir please find enclosed stamped envelop and clipping from to-day's chicago telegram clipping quoted from your paper would take it as a great fa vor if you will let me know if there is any reasonable foundation to the story or is it merely out of the nu merous items lam an old chronic sufferer and if there is anything in it would be glad to know it respect fully yours vv v power p s â€” would like to know of some one who has tried it the whole matter was referred to col gantt of the athens banner watchman who answers as follows we will state that there is nothing humorous about the above but it is an old remedy that has long been iu practice in the rural districts around athens and hundreds of cures have been effected by it of late it has broken out afresh iu oconee county and persons who have been sufferers from dyspepsia for yearn are now eutircly cured the sand taken must of course be very fine grains and is best when gotten from the run of a spring where it bubbles up with the force of the water take a tea spoonful after each meal the effects are not at all unpleasant or injurious and after a few days patients can eat any kind of food and digest it thor oughly mr webb barbar former ly a citizen of athens substituted pulverized glass for sand and took a small quantity after each meal for years and says he never suffered with dyspepsia afterwards and the glass always kept his bowels regulated the remedy is simple and costs noth ing and from the statement of many reliable parties we can guarantee that there is nothing injurious about its use if necessary we can give a number of certificates from parties who suffered for years from this afflic tion and aie now entirely well from the sand cure â€” atlanta constitution a record of hot sun^iqers says an english paper in 627 the heat was so great in france and germany that all springs dried up water became so scarce that many people died of thirst in 879 work iff the fields had to be given up agri cultural laborers persisting in their work were struck down in a few min utes so powerful was the sun in 993 the stin's rays were so fierce that vegetation burned as under the action of fire in 1000 rivers ran drv un der the protracted heat ; the fisli were left dry in heaps and putritied in a few hours the stench that ensued produced the plague men and ani mals venturing in the sun in the summer of 1032 fell down dying the throat parched to a tinder and the blood rushed to the brain in 1132 not only did the rivera dry up but the ground cracked on every side and became baked to the hardness of stone the rhine in alsace nearly dried up itally was visited with terrific heat in 1139 vegetation and plants were burned up during the battle of bela 1260 there were more victims made by the sun than weapons ; men fell down sunstruck in regular rows in 1303 and 1304 the rhine loire and seine ran dry scotland suffered particularly in 1265 men and beasts died in scores the heat in several french departments during the sum mer of 1705 was equal to that iu a glass furnace meat could be cooked by merely exposing it to the sun ot a soul dared venture out between noon and 4 p m in 1718 many shops had to close ; the theatres nev er opened their doors for several months not a drop of water fell during six months in 1753 the ther mometer rose to 118 degress iu 1779 the heat at bologna was so great that a great number of people were stifled llierp was uot sufficient air for the breath and people had to take refuge under ground in july 1793 the heat became intolerable vegetables were burned up and fruit dried upon the trees the furniture and wood work in dwelling houses cracked and split up ; meat went bail in an hour i'he rivers ran dry in several provin ces during 1821 ; expedients had to be devised for the grinding of corn in 1822 a protracted heat was accom panied by storms and earthquakes ; luring the drought legions of mice over-ran lorraine and alsace com mittjng incalculable damage in 1832 the heat brought about cholera in france twenty thousand persons fell victims to the visitation in paris alone in 1815 the thermometer marked 125 degrees in the sun about dog'a a bad bog and a good dog petland revisited | a dog belonging to the b â€” s which was a great favorite of theirs and re garded as of thoroughly irreproacha ! ble training was charged by some of jtheir negh bora with worrying sheep at night the family rebutted this charge on the ground that the dog was fastened into their kitchen at night and was never let out until the servants came down in the morning the farmers however persisted that they knew the dog well and had seen him going from the sheepfold though lie had managed to escape them when this was urged so strong iv as to make it imperative on the b â€” s to take some further step one of the daughters volunteered to sleep in the kitchen and watch the dog's behavior when they made up the young i lady's bed the dog seemed very rest less and strange but by and by he settled down and all was silent a little after midnight he got up came to the bed and sniffed about ! until he had satisfied himself that the ladv was wot awake then he leaped into the window seat lifted the catch of the shutters and opened them then he undid the latch of the win dow which he opened and then dis appeared after a long interval he came buck closed and fastened the window and shutters and finished by licking ins own feet and the marks which he had left by springing on the floor to the terror of the seeming sleeper he now came and clasely scrutinized her ; but she kept still and he at last crept oft to his own bed as soon as she heard the servants stirring the lady rose softly and slip ped through the door but the guilty dog had marked her he sprang up and made a dash at her with most un disguised fury for he saw that hi secret was discovered and his charac ter blasted by one whom he regarded as a hateful spy fortunately she got the door fast shut in time and at once alarmed the j house but the dog was now so fu rious that uo o.ue dared go into the kilchen,and at last a gun was brought pointed through an aperture and he was shot dead john s^eppard [Â». a swinu t 31 moore Â«-. kluttz's warehouse for the sale of leaf tobacco salisbury north carolina farmers remember klitts warehouse has sold three fourths of all the tobacco sow on this njarke this season and i;iy shoy the highest averages for crops and a general average second to none in the state for the same grades of tobacco kluttz's warehouse is the best lighted best arranged and the only house in tit place that has storage room for planter's tobacco if you want the highest prices for your tobacco sell at kluttz's warehouse where you will always find a full turn-out of anxious buyers john sheppard the champion tobacco auctioneer of westeb north carolina has orders for tobaccos and will pay highest prices for all grades from the ground leaves to fancy lemon wrapners daily sales highest prices guaranteed your friends truly sheppard swink Â£ moxr0e salisbury n p june 4th 1884 and wlu completely change the blood la tho entire system in tbr.o muiitli 4 k r person who win take 1 pill each night from 1 to 13 week may be restored to sound health if such a thing be possible for female complaints these pills have no rtpial physicians use them for the cure of liter and ki1>net diseases sold everywhere or tent by mail for 35c ia stamps circulars free i s joilsdus Â£ co . bostua s w^k s pr 5 bik^ij tt if fcls crocp a't'irn-i rrr.nr!ilti nr'.iral johnson's anodyne liniment ttres lnouenai hwdlmr at the tntij v --. ness harkiiu iu.-h wiiwp'iii ( ou-h chronic l>iarrliira s"n!crv ( ht.lcr.i m.irl.m ki.lcuv i r^ubicj auj diseases of tbi spsc suid evrrrwucre urrobrs flpre 1 s ioansnn it co boston mas der iv>?e one tp.i'pf'nfnl tnpach pntof â– â– â– "â– â– â– â– ^^ i1bbbiu v kz3w ul m food itnill alw poittively prevent an-1 cure iin:rholrra.*c soljetprrwhrrcorsent hvriall'iÂ»r?.v a chicken cholera cir^ar3n^c s ir&juii>-6u^'t^cu./^iua?uÂ«sa , de 2 . hly r m datis r t fiimitiire dealer upik>isterer isl r l and undertaker kl fine walnut suits - - - 50 i^^^^^a cotta ge suits 20 25 and$30 woven wire mattresses 7.50 parlor suits 35 to 100 cheap beds 2.50 fine line of carpets sewing machinesâ€”weed and hartford u rw t Â« tmrin e active axd istki-mÂ«e\t acubhts m c v r y t a w a.jm 1 nil i rÂ»nj eounty to sell o.ir l'ol l lai new l.uoks nd f ami1.y blliles ministers tcaclier.i others whose time is not fully oo-upi.d wi'.l nnd it to their inwr.-t to ciji respond with u t.i f:irin<.-rs'Â»gii and other y.iuns men just coming on the licul of aation this business offers many ndtimtrow n.'h s a mean f mÂ»kin money m.d of lf culture wriw for specul b f johxsftx 6i co 1,013 mÂ«ln street liithiuend vsw stands at the head tiik i.r<;iit-nrnmn domestic that it is the acknowledged liader is a fact that cannot be disputed many imitate it none equal it i the largest armed the lightest running the most beautiful woo work a*d i warranted t be made of the best material to do nuy and all kin<ls of work to he complete in every respect i wents wanted in unoccupied territory ' address domestic sewin'i m.y'iiink co ki limond va 1 for sale by kluttz & rexdleman s4 â€” :;(",: iv salisbury n c i executor's notice all persons having claim against iÂ«e estate of tobias file deed are hereby notified to present the same to me for pay ment t>n or before tl 2d day ol october 1885 orthi ! : - : ' pj e:i '' in ii:ir ol recovery aivi all tlinsc indebted u the said estate are requested to make early settlement f the same m s fkaley executor gppt 27th 1884 6w:pd id ___# rjioorn ; : i \ * :: ; .. . w c.c i.r skc total assets 710,745.12 a hoin < company seeking home patronage strong peompt rÂ£liabl3 liberal term policies written on dwelling pretniams payable one luufcxsh uii<l l>a aace in twelve months j allen brown agt 2 6m ibur x ( . wfflcit s ikdiah andil blious complaints uij l'i - - â– â– > ail â– '" --.*->- save your fruit scarr's fruit preservative without the u â– â– â€¢ t s ilc*l can t cheapest and only sure k known p+:i;ik ii r hakmlecs and try it at knnis i o s itf

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the carolina watchman r 01 xv.-thirb series salisbury n c october 9 188 no 52 coming in every day and when all are received will show to our friends the and fall and winter stock of goods in all desirable lines that ever was shown in our town stoke house will be full from top to bottom with goods at lower prices than ever before known for many articles please remember that we will pay you the high est prices for your cotton c and sell you gqo0 goods - as low as they can be bought in western north carolina j r d gaskill miscelfcaneouf peace susanna i o world great world with ail thy busy days ; and rushing tides that fill tjÂ»y great high ways i thy varied merchandise and costlj sliow | what is the greatest gift thou canst be stow t o life with all thy strivings and tjjj selu-mes . thy fond desires and ever changing dreams 1 what wilt thou give us for our eager quest ? what are thy choicest treasures t peace and rest ; bnt peace by striviug only njay be won â€” j the sure reward of duty bravely done and those who labor ami eudure the best after long toil shall know the sweetest rest danjsh barque it i alto on voyage from wilmington n c towards trieste austria off isle of zante ionian sea â€” sat urday feb 23 1884 a week to day since we quitted the plutonic shades of strom boli ; a week to-night since we bade defiance to the tenors of ocylla and charybdis and a week to-morrow since etna's peak with umbrage blue melted into sicilia's pastoral plains it was our fate to escape scyila and chary bd is only to fall into the clutches of boreas du ring the whole of this period we have been battling against a violent north er which sweeps down with irreaist able fury from the mountain regions of montenegro and dalmatia and is called bora by the shivering inhabi tants of the isles of greece this morning it was evident that the hours of the bora were numbered when i went on deck at 4 a m there was an expectant hush iu the atmosphere as if nature was awaiting with bated breath the impending change a mass of dusky clouds looming vast and fantastic in the uncertain light â€” like mountains in dreamland hung around the eastern horizon as though await ing the coming of the god of glad ness that they might catch the first golden beams a gleam of lambent bursts from the waves â€” higher and higher it ascends as the lord of light rises from his billowy couch at last his lower limb barely oscu lates the glowing horizon it is morn ou tho waters and purple and bright bursts on the billows the flushing of light there is one cloud that melts not with the others beneath the blazing food of light an examination with the binoculars proves it to be land the hyacinthiueisleof zmte l quia sua to which and to his ever faithful wife his heart was ever constant through all the enchantments of the hesperi an garden of alciuous and the se ductive charms of the princess van cisca when calypso the fair-hair ed nymph with every beauty crown ed attempted by ravishing songs to prevail upon sad ulysses to re main with her in her violet isle amid scenes where if a god should cast his sight a god might gaze and wouder with de light he maintained a sad silence â€” while wistfully he eyed the barren dÂ«ep wept groaned despairing sighed and wept again until calypro becoming disgusted with his lugubrious ungallantry fitted him out with some cold victuals and a canoe and told him to paduie out what a noble guide book homer prove to these regions of song how the sublime descriptions of the son of jos the star of song the grace of graces puts to shame the drivel ling of bradshaw's and baedek er's he who can visit the scenes of the odyssey and iliad and believe homer to have been blind must then be prepared to impute to him the powers of divination in uo other manner can the accurate descriptions in that immortal work be accounted for the sightless author of paradise lost also wrote striking descriptions but chiefly of abstractions or of such things as the conversation of others might furnish him the ground work and his active imagination the re mainder milton's affliction came on in later life after his accute powers of observation hail stored his mind with countless visions and vivid memories pf the visible world of nature ho mer that lord of mighty song as | dante calif him combining the at i tention to minute details of crabbe 1 and hogg with the glowing imagery and rich vocabulary of byroit and i moore paints word pictures of such topographical exactness that the most ' unobserving co,yld scarcely fail to re cognize at a glance any scene describ ed in the wanderings of ulysses i even thought i could discern faith ftil argus in the group of sore-eyed scalded canines on the quay perhaps i wrong the brute in question but judging from the general expression of his features i would hesitate awhile before trusting to his powers of mem ory after a separation of twenty years i would prefer to place my depend ence on something higher â€” the back fence for instance about mid-day the unexpected re turn of the bora compelled us to turn our backs upon fair greece and thread our way among tke groups of islands which add beauty to the land scape bnt danger to the navigation how thickly associations cluster in this region the history and civili zation of a world is comprised within a territory no larger than rhode is land almost every spot of ground in this vicinity is immortalized by song or battle it was not a sense less fable which made clio the sister of calliope it was the thoughtful al legory of a philosophic stud observing mind which beheld the intimate rela tions of poetry to history in clothing with amaranthine fame the scenes of wars or verses what the punic wars did towards establishing the undying renown of ancient carthage the songs of homer have done for the ionian isles what the deeds of leonidas themistocles and miltiades were to the ancient greeks the verses of lord byron are to modern greece late in the afternoon when the sombre shadows of mt enos were ly ing far out upon the waves and the god of gladness was shedding his parting smile we sighted santa mau ra and about twilight ran in under lencadia's far protecting rock of woo where tradition says that sap pho committed suicide but where welcker that heartless teutonic icon oclast of romance pays she did not put suihi in your craw an old chicago sufferer asks about the new cure for dyspepsia some time ago the constitution pub lished the following special from athens : the most wonderful cures of dys pepsia are being made around athens by taking a spoonful of fine saud af ter each meal parties who have been suffering for years areentirely relieved there is a good deal of excitement over the new remedy this was extensively copied in the northern press and brought among other letters the following 1127 wabash avenue chicago il linois august 31st 1884 dear sir please find enclosed stamped envelop and clipping from to-day's chicago telegram clipping quoted from your paper would take it as a great fa vor if you will let me know if there is any reasonable foundation to the story or is it merely out of the nu merous items lam an old chronic sufferer and if there is anything in it would be glad to know it respect fully yours vv v power p s â€” would like to know of some one who has tried it the whole matter was referred to col gantt of the athens banner watchman who answers as follows we will state that there is nothing humorous about the above but it is an old remedy that has long been iu practice in the rural districts around athens and hundreds of cures have been effected by it of late it has broken out afresh iu oconee county and persons who have been sufferers from dyspepsia for yearn are now eutircly cured the sand taken must of course be very fine grains and is best when gotten from the run of a spring where it bubbles up with the force of the water take a tea spoonful after each meal the effects are not at all unpleasant or injurious and after a few days patients can eat any kind of food and digest it thor oughly mr webb barbar former ly a citizen of athens substituted pulverized glass for sand and took a small quantity after each meal for years and says he never suffered with dyspepsia afterwards and the glass always kept his bowels regulated the remedy is simple and costs noth ing and from the statement of many reliable parties we can guarantee that there is nothing injurious about its use if necessary we can give a number of certificates from parties who suffered for years from this afflic tion and aie now entirely well from the sand cure â€” atlanta constitution a record of hot sun^iqers says an english paper in 627 the heat was so great in france and germany that all springs dried up water became so scarce that many people died of thirst in 879 work iff the fields had to be given up agri cultural laborers persisting in their work were struck down in a few min utes so powerful was the sun in 993 the stin's rays were so fierce that vegetation burned as under the action of fire in 1000 rivers ran drv un der the protracted heat ; the fisli were left dry in heaps and putritied in a few hours the stench that ensued produced the plague men and ani mals venturing in the sun in the summer of 1032 fell down dying the throat parched to a tinder and the blood rushed to the brain in 1132 not only did the rivera dry up but the ground cracked on every side and became baked to the hardness of stone the rhine in alsace nearly dried up itally was visited with terrific heat in 1139 vegetation and plants were burned up during the battle of bela 1260 there were more victims made by the sun than weapons ; men fell down sunstruck in regular rows in 1303 and 1304 the rhine loire and seine ran dry scotland suffered particularly in 1265 men and beasts died in scores the heat in several french departments during the sum mer of 1705 was equal to that iu a glass furnace meat could be cooked by merely exposing it to the sun ot a soul dared venture out between noon and 4 p m in 1718 many shops had to close ; the theatres nev er opened their doors for several months not a drop of water fell during six months in 1753 the ther mometer rose to 118 degress iu 1779 the heat at bologna was so great that a great number of people were stifled llierp was uot sufficient air for the breath and people had to take refuge under ground in july 1793 the heat became intolerable vegetables were burned up and fruit dried upon the trees the furniture and wood work in dwelling houses cracked and split up ; meat went bail in an hour i'he rivers ran dry in several provin ces during 1821 ; expedients had to be devised for the grinding of corn in 1822 a protracted heat was accom panied by storms and earthquakes ; luring the drought legions of mice over-ran lorraine and alsace com mittjng incalculable damage in 1832 the heat brought about cholera in france twenty thousand persons fell victims to the visitation in paris alone in 1815 the thermometer marked 125 degrees in the sun about dog'a a bad bog and a good dog petland revisited | a dog belonging to the b â€” s which was a great favorite of theirs and re garded as of thoroughly irreproacha ! ble training was charged by some of jtheir negh bora with worrying sheep at night the family rebutted this charge on the ground that the dog was fastened into their kitchen at night and was never let out until the servants came down in the morning the farmers however persisted that they knew the dog well and had seen him going from the sheepfold though lie had managed to escape them when this was urged so strong iv as to make it imperative on the b â€” s to take some further step one of the daughters volunteered to sleep in the kitchen and watch the dog's behavior when they made up the young i lady's bed the dog seemed very rest less and strange but by and by he settled down and all was silent a little after midnight he got up came to the bed and sniffed about ! until he had satisfied himself that the ladv was wot awake then he leaped into the window seat lifted the catch of the shutters and opened them then he undid the latch of the win dow which he opened and then dis appeared after a long interval he came buck closed and fastened the window and shutters and finished by licking ins own feet and the marks which he had left by springing on the floor to the terror of the seeming sleeper he now came and clasely scrutinized her ; but she kept still and he at last crept oft to his own bed as soon as she heard the servants stirring the lady rose softly and slip ped through the door but the guilty dog had marked her he sprang up and made a dash at her with most un disguised fury for he saw that hi secret was discovered and his charac ter blasted by one whom he regarded as a hateful spy fortunately she got the door fast shut in time and at once alarmed the j house but the dog was now so fu rious that uo o.ue dared go into the kilchen,and at last a gun was brought pointed through an aperture and he was shot dead john s^eppard [Â». a swinu t 31 moore Â«-. kluttz's warehouse for the sale of leaf tobacco salisbury north carolina farmers remember klitts warehouse has sold three fourths of all the tobacco sow on this njarke this season and i;iy shoy the highest averages for crops and a general average second to none in the state for the same grades of tobacco kluttz's warehouse is the best lighted best arranged and the only house in tit place that has storage room for planter's tobacco if you want the highest prices for your tobacco sell at kluttz's warehouse where you will always find a full turn-out of anxious buyers john sheppard the champion tobacco auctioneer of westeb north carolina has orders for tobaccos and will pay highest prices for all grades from the ground leaves to fancy lemon wrapners daily sales highest prices guaranteed your friends truly sheppard swink Â£ moxr0e salisbury n p june 4th 1884 and wlu completely change the blood la tho entire system in tbr.o muiitli 4 k r person who win take 1 pill each night from 1 to 13 week may be restored to sound health if such a thing be possible for female complaints these pills have no rtpial physicians use them for the cure of liter and ki1>net diseases sold everywhere or tent by mail for 35c ia stamps circulars free i s joilsdus Â£ co . bostua s w^k s pr 5 bik^ij tt if fcls crocp a't'irn-i rrr.nr!ilti nr'.iral johnson's anodyne liniment ttres lnouenai hwdlmr at the tntij v --. ness harkiiu iu.-h wiiwp'iii ( ou-h chronic l>iarrliira s"n!crv ( ht.lcr.i m.irl.m ki.lcuv i r^ubicj auj diseases of tbi spsc suid evrrrwucre urrobrs flpre 1 s ioansnn it co boston mas der iv>?e one tp.i'pf'nfnl tnpach pntof â– â– â– "â– â– â– â– ^^ i1bbbiu v kz3w ul m food itnill alw poittively prevent an-1 cure iin:rholrra.*c soljetprrwhrrcorsent hvriall'iÂ»r?.v a chicken cholera cir^ar3n^c s ir&juii>-6u^'t^cu./^iua?uÂ«sa , de 2 . hly r m datis r t fiimitiire dealer upik>isterer isl r l and undertaker kl fine walnut suits - - - 50 i^^^^^a cotta ge suits 20 25 and$30 woven wire mattresses 7.50 parlor suits 35 to 100 cheap beds 2.50 fine line of carpets sewing machinesâ€”weed and hartford u rw t Â« tmrin e active axd istki-mÂ«e\t acubhts m c v r y t a w a.jm 1 nil i rÂ»nj eounty to sell o.ir l'ol l lai new l.uoks nd f ami1.y blliles ministers tcaclier.i others whose time is not fully oo-upi.d wi'.l nnd it to their inwr.-t to ciji respond with u t.i f:irinn or before tl 2d day ol october 1885 orthi ! : - : ' pj e:i '' in ii:ir ol recovery aivi all tlinsc indebted u the said estate are requested to make early settlement f the same m s fkaley executor gppt 27th 1884 6w:pd id ___# rjioorn ; : i \ * :: ; .. . w c.c i.r skc total assets 710,745.12 a hoin < company seeking home patronage strong peompt rÂ£liabl3 liberal term policies written on dwelling pretniams payable one luufcxsh uiia aace in twelve months j allen brown agt 2 6m ibur x ( . wfflcit s ikdiah andil blious complaints uij l'i - - â– â– > ail â– '" --.*->- save your fruit scarr's fruit preservative without the u â– â– â€¢ t s ilc*l can t cheapest and only sure k known p+:i;ik ii r hakmlecs and try it at knnis i o s itf